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We believe, then, in One God, one beginning, having no
beginning, uncreate, unbegotten, imperishable and immortal,
everlasting, infinite, uncircumscribed, boundless, of infinite
power, simple, uncompound, incorporeal, without flux, passionless,
unchangeable, unalterable, unseen, the fountain of goodness and
justice, the light of the mind, inaccessible; a power known by no
measure, measurable only by His own will alone (for all things that
He wills He can), creator of all created things, seen or unseen,
of all the maintainer and preserver, for all the provider, master and
lord and king over all, with an endless and immortal kingdom: having
no contrary, filling all, by nothing encompassed, but rather Himself
the encompasser and maintainer and original possessor of the universe,
occupying all essences intact and extending beyond all things, and
being separate from all essence as being super-essential and above all
things and absolute God, absolute goodness, and absolute fulness:
determining all sovereignties and ranks, being placed above all
sovereignty and rank, above essence and life and word and thought:
being Himself very light and goodness and life and essence, inasmuch
as He does not derive His being from another, that is to say, of
those things that exist: but being Himself the fountain of being to
all that is, of life to the living, of reason to those that have
reason; to all the cause of all good: perceiving all things even
before they have become: one essence, one divinity, one power, one
will, one energy, one beginning, one authority, one dominion, one
sovereignty, made known in three perfect subsistences anti adored with
one adoration, believed in and ministered to by all rational creation,
united without confusion and divided without separation (which indeed
transcends thought). (We believe) in Father and Son and Holy
Spirit whereinto also we have been baptized. For so our Lord
commanded the Apostles to baptize, saying, Baptizing them in the
name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
(We believe) in one Father, the beginning, and cause of all:
begotten of no one: without cause or generation, alone subsisting:
creator of all: but Father of one only by nature, His
Only-begotten Son and our Lord and God and Saviour Jesus
Christ, and Producer of the most Holy Spirit. And in one Son of
God, the Only-begotten, our Lord, Jesus Christ: begotten of
the Father, before all the ages: Light of Light, true God of true
God: begotten, not made, consubstantial with the Father, through
Whom all things are made: and when we say He was before all the ages
we shew that His birth is without time or beginning: for the Son of
God was not brought into being out of nothing, He that is the
effulgence of the glory, the impress of the Father's subsistence,
the living wisdom and power, the Word possessing interior
subsistence, the essential and perfect and living image s of the unseen
God. But always He was with the Father and in Him, everlastingly
and without beginning begotten of Him. For there never was a time
when the Father was and the Son was not, but always the Father and
always the Son, Who was begotten of Him, existed together. For
He could not have received the name Father apart from the Son: for
if He were without the Son, He could not be the Father: and if He
thereafter had the Son, thereafter He became the Father, not having
been the Father prior to this, and He was changed from that which was
not the Father and became the Father. This is the worst form of
blasphemy. For we may not speak of God as destitute of natural
generative power: and generative power means, the power of producing
from one's self, that is to say, from one's own proper essence,
that which is like in nature to one's self.
In treating, then, of the generation of the Son, it is an act of
impiety to say that time comes into play and that the existence of the
Son is of later origin than the Father. For we hold that it is from
Him, that is, from the Father's nature, that the Son is
generated. And unless we grant that the Son co-existed from the
beginning with the Father, by Whom He was begotten, we introduce
change into the Father's subsistence, because, not being the
Father, He subsequently became the Father. For the creation, even
though it originated later, is nevertheless not derived from the
essence of God, but is brought into existence out of nothing by His
will and power, and change does not touch God's nature. For
generation means that the begetter produces out of his essence offspring
similar in essence. But creation and making mean that the creator and
maker produces from that which is external, and not out of his own
essence, a creation of an absolutely dissimilar nature.
Wherefore in God, Who alone is passionless and unalterable, and
immutable, and ever so continueth, both begetting and creating are
passionless. For being by nature passionless and not liable to flux,
since He is simple and uncompound, He is not subject to passion or
flux either in begetting or in creating, nor has He need of any
co-operation. But generation in Him is without beginning and
everlasting, being the work of nature and producing out of His own
essence, that the Begetter may not undergo change, and that He may
not be God first and God last, nor receive any accession: while
creation in the case of God, being the work of will, is not
co-eternal with God. For it is not natural that that which is
brought into existence out of nothing should be co-eternal with what is
without beginning and everlasting. There is this difference in fact
between man's making and God's. Man can bring nothing into
existence out of nothing, but all that he makes requires pre-existing
matter for its basis, and he does not create it by will only, but
thinks out first what it is to be and pictures it in his mind, and only
then fashions it with his hands, undergoing labour and troubles, and
often missing the mark and failing to produce to his satisfaction that
after which he strives. But God, through the exercise of will
alone, has brought all things into existence out of nothing. Now
there is the same difference between God and man in begetting and
generating. For in God, Who is without time and beginning,
passionless, not liable to flux, incorporeal, alone and without end,
generation is without time and beginning, passionless and not liable to
flux, nor dependent on the union of two: nor has His own
incomprehensible generation beginning or end. And it is without
beginning because He is immutable: without flux because He is
passionless and incorporeal: independent of the union of two again
because He is incorporeal but also because He is the one and only
God, and stands in need of no co-operation: and without end or
cessation because He is without beginning, or time, or end, and ever
continues the same. For that which has no beginning has no end: but
that which through grace is endless is assuredly not without beginning,
as, witness, the angels.
Accordingly the everlasting God generates His own Word which is
perfect, without beginning and without end, that God, Whose nature
and existence are above time, may not engender in time. But with man
clearly it is otherwise, for generation is with him a matter of sex,
and destruction and flux and increase and body clothe him round about,
and he possesses a nature which is male or female. For the male
requires the assistance of the female. But may He Who surpasses
all, and transcends all thought and comprehension, be gracious to us.
The holy catholic and apostolic Church, then, teaches the existence
at once of a Father: and of His Only-begotten Son, born of Him
without time and flux and passion, in a manner incomprehensible and
perceived by the God of the universe alone: just as we recognise the
existence at once of fire and the light which proceeds from it: for
there is not first fire and thereafter light, but they exist together.
And just as light is ever the product of fire, and ever is in it and
at no time is separate from it, so in like manner also the Son is
begotten of the Father and is never in any ways separate from Him,
but ever is in Him. But whereas the light which is produced from fire
without separation, and abideth ever in it, has no proper subsistence
of its own distinct from that of fire (for it is a natural quality of
fire), the Only-begotten Son of God, begotten of the Father
without separation and difference and ever abiding in Him, has a
proper subsistence of its own distinct froth that of the Father.
The terms, 'Word' and 'effulgence,' then, are used because He
is begotten of the Father without the union of two, or passion, or
time, or flux, or separation: and the terms 'Son' and 'impress of
the Father's subsistence,' because He is perfect and has
subsistence s and is in all respects similar to the Father, save that
the Father is not begotten: and the term 'Only-begotten' because
He alone was begotten alone of the Father alone. For no other
generation is like to the generation of the Son of God, since no
other is Son of God. For though the Holy Spirit proceedeth from
the Father, yet this is not generative in character but processional.
This is a different mode of existence, alike incomprehensible and
unknown, just as is the generation of the Son. Wherefore all the
qualities the Father has are the Son's, save that the Father is
unbegotten, and this exception involves no difference in essence nor
dignity, but only a different mode of coming into existence. We have
an analogy in Adam, who was not begotten (for God Himself moulded
him), and Seth, who was begotten (for he is Adam's son), and
Eve, who proceeded out of Adam's rib (for she was not begotten).
These do not differ from each other in nature, for they are human
beings: but they differ in the mode of coming into existence.
For one must recognise that the word agenhGon
with only one 'n' signifies "uncreate" or
"not having been made," while agennhGon
written with double 'n' means "unbegotten."
According to the first significance essence differs from essence: for
one essence is uncreate, or agenhGon with one
'n,' and another is create or
genhGh. But in the second significance there
is no difference between essence and essence. For the first
subsistence of all kinds of living creatures is
agennhGos but not
agenhGos. For they were created by the
Creator, being brought into being by His Word, but they were not
begotten, for there was no pre-existing form like themselves from
which they might have been born.
So then in the first sense of the word the three absolutely divine
subsistences of the Holy Godhead agree: for they exist as one in
essence and uncreate. But with the second signification it is quite
otherwise. For the Father alone is ingenerate, no other subsistence
having given Him being. And the Son alone is generate, for He was
begotten of the Father's essence without beginning and without time.
And only the Holy Spirit proceedeth from the Father's essence, not
having been generated but simply proceeding. For this is the doctrine
of Holy Scripture. But the nature of the generation and the
procession is quite beyond comprehension.
And this also it behoves us to know, that the names Fatherhood,
Sonship and Procession, were not applied to the Holy Godhead by
us: on the contrary, they were communicated to us by the Godhead, as
the divine apostle says, Wherefore I bow the knee to the Father,
from Whom is every family in heaven and on earth. But if we say that
the Father is the origin of the Son and greater than the Son, we do
not suggest any precedence in time or superiority in nature of the
Father over the Son (for through His agency He made the ages), or
superiority in any other respect save causation. And we mean by this,
that the Son is begotten of the Father and not the Father of the
Son, and that the Father naturally is the cause of the Son: just as
we say in the same way not that fire proceedeth from light, but rather
light from fire. So then, whenever we hear it said that the Father
is the origin of the Son and greater than the Son, let us understand
it to mean in respect of causation. And just as we do not say that
fire is of one essence and light of another, so we cannot say that the
Father is of one essence and the Son of another: but both are of one
and the same essence. And just as we say that fire has brightness
through the light proceeding from it, and do not consider the light of
the fire as an instrument ministering to the fire, but rather as its
natural force: so we say that the Father creates all that He creates
through His Only-begotten Son, not as though the Son were a mere
instrument serving the Father's ends, but as His natural and
subsistential force. And just as we say both that the fire shines and
again that the light of the fire shines, So all things whatsoever the
Father doeth, these also doeth the Son likewise. But whereas light
possesses no proper subsistence of its own, distinct from that of the
fire, the Son is a perfect subsistence, inseparable from the
Father's subsistence, as we have shewn above. For it is quite
impossible to find in creation an image that will illustrate in itself
exactly in all details the nature of the Holy Trinity. For how could
that which is create and compound, subject to flux and change,
circumscribed, formed and corruptible, clearly shew forth the
super-essential divine essence, unaffected as it is in any of these
ways? Now it is evident that all creation is liable to most of these
affections, and all from its very nature is subject to corruption.
Likewise we believe also in one Holy Spirit, the Lord and Giver of
Life: Who proceedeth from the Father and resteth in the Son: the
object of equal adoration and glorification with the Father and Son,
since He is co-essential and co-eternal: the Spirit of God,
direct, authoritative, the fountain of wisdom, and life, and
holiness: God existing and addressed along with Father and Son:
uncreate, full, creative, all-ruling, all-effecting,
all-powerful, of infinite power, Lord of all creation and not under
any lord: deifying, not deified: filling, not filled: shared in,
not sharing in: sanctifying, not sanctified: the intercessor,
receiving the supplications of all: in all things like to the Father
and Son: proceeding from the Father and communicated through the
Son, and participated in by all creation, through Himself creating,
and investing with essence and sanctifying, and maintaining the
universe: having subsistence, existing in its own proper and peculiar
subsistence, inseparable and indivisible from Father and Son, and
possessing all the qualities that the Father and Son possess, save
that of not being begotten or born. For the Father is without canst
and unborn: for He is derived from nothing, but derives from Himself
His being, nor does He derive a single quality from another. Rather
He is Himself the beginning and cause of the existence of all things
in a definite and natural manner. But the Son is derived from the
Father after the manner of generation, and the Holy Spirit likewise
is derived from the Father, yet not after the manner of generation,
but after that of procession. And we have learned that there is a
difference between generation and procession, but the nature of that
difference we in no wise understand. Further, the generation of the
Son from the Father and the procession of the Holy Spirit are
simultaneous.
All then that the Son and the Spirit have is from the Father, even
their very being: and unless the Father is, neither the Son nor the
Spirit is. And unless the Father possesses a certain attribute,
neither the Son nor the Spirit possesses it: and through the
Father, that is, because of the Father's existence, the Son and
the Spirit exist, and through the Father, that is, because of the
Father having the qualities, the Son and the Spirit have all their
qualities, those of being unbegotten, and of birth and of procession
being excepted. For in these hypostatic or personal properties alone
do the three holy subsistences differ from each other, being
indivisibly divided not by essence but by the distinguishing mark of
their proper and peculiar subsistence.
Further we say that each of the three has a perfect subsistence, that
we may understand not one compound perfect nature made up of three
imperfect elements, but one simple essence, surpassing and preceding
perfection, existing in three perfect subsistences. For all that is
composed of imperfect elements must necessarily be compound. But from
perfect subsistences no compound can arise. Wherefore we do not speak
of the form as from subsistences, but as in subsistences. But we
speak of those things as imperfect which do not preserve the form of
that which is completed out of them. For stone and wood and iron are
each perfect in its own nature, but with reference to the building that
is completed out of them each is imperfect: for none of them is in
itself a house.
The subsistences then we say are perfect, that we may not conceive of
the divine nature as compound. For compoundness is the beginning of
separation. And again we speak of the three subsistences as being in
each other, that we may not introduce a crowd and multitude of Gods.
Owing to the three subsistences, there is no compoundness or
confusion: while, owing to their having the same essence and dwelling
in one another, and being the same in will, and energy, and power,
and authority, and movement, so to speak, we recognise the
indivisibility and the unity of God. For verily there is one God,
and His word and Spirit.
Marg. MS. Concerning the distinction of the three subsistences:
and concerning the thing itself and our reason and thought in relation
to it.
One ought, moreover, to recognise that it is one thing to look at a
matter as it is, and another thing to look at it in the light of reason
and thought. In the case of all created things, the distinction of
the subsistences is observed in actual fact. For in actual fact Peter
is seen to be separate from Paul. But the community and connection
and unity are apprehended by reason and thought. For it is by the mind
that we perceive that Peter and Paul are of the same nature and have
one common nature. For both are living creatures, rational and
mortal: and both are flesh, endowed with the spirit of reason and
understanding. It is, then, by reason that this community of nature
is observed. For here indeed the subsistences do not exist one within
the other. But each privately and individually, that is to say, in
itself, stands quite separate, having very many points that divide it
from the other. For they are both separated in space and differ in
time, and are divided in thought, and power, and shape, or form,
and habit, and temperament and dignity, and pursuits, and all
differentiating properties, but above all, in the fact that they do
not dwell in one another but are separated. Hence it comes that we can
speak of two, three, or many men.
And this may be perceived throughout the whole of creation, but in the
case of the holy and superessential and incomprehensible Trinity, far
removed from everything, it is quite the reverse. For there the
community and unity are observed in fact, through the co-eternity of
the subsistences, and through their having the same essence and energy
and will and concord of mind, and then being identical in authority and
power and goodness--I do not say similar but identical--and then
movement by one impulse. For there is one essence, one goodness, one
power, one will, one energy, one authority, one and the same, I
repeat, not three resembling each other. But the three subsistences
have one and the same movement. For each one of them is related as
closely to the other as to itself: that is to say that the Father,
the Son, and the Holy Spirit are one in all respects, save those of
not being begotten, of birth and of procession. But it is by thought
that the difference is perceived. For we recognise one God: but only
in the attributes of Fatherhood, Sonship, and Procession, both in
respect of cause and effect and perfection of subsistence, that is,
manner of existence, do we perceive difference. For with reference to
the uncircumscribed Deity we cannot speak of separation in space, as
we can in our own case. For the subsistences dwell in one another, in
no wise confused but cleaving together, according to the word of the
Lord, I am in the father, and the father in Me: nor can one admit
difference in will or judgment or energy or power or anything else
whatsoever which may produce actual and absolute separation in our
case. Wherefore we do not speak of three Gods, the Father, the
Son, and the Holy Spirit, but rather of one God, the holy
Trinity, the Son and Spirit being referred to one cause, and not
compounded or coalesced according to the synaeresis of Sabellius.
For, as we said, they are made one not so as to commingle, but so as
to cleave to each other, and they have their being in each other
without any coalescence or commingling. Nor do the Son and the
Spirit stand apart, nor are they sundered in essence according to the
diaeresis of Arias. For the Deity is undivided amongst things
divided, to put it concisely: and it is just like three suns cleaving
to each other without separation and giving out light mingled and
conjoined into one. When, then, we turn our eyes to the Divinity,
and the first cause and the sovereignty and the oneness anti sameness,
so to speak, of the movement and will of the Divinity, and the
identity in essence and power and energy and lordship, what is seen by
us is unity. But when we look to those things in which the Divinity
is, or, to put it more accurately, which are the Divinity, and
those things which are in it through the first cause without time or
distinction in glory or separation, that is to say, the subsistences
of the Son and the Spirit, it seems to us a Trinity that we adore.
The Father is one Father, and without beginning, that is, without
cause: for He is not derived from anything. The Son is one Son,
but not without beginning, that is, not without cause: for He is
derived from the Father. But if you eliminate the idea of a beginning
from time, He is also without beginning: for the creator of times
cannot be subject to time. The Holy Spirit is one Spirit, going
forth from the Father, not in the manner of Sonship but of
procession; so that neither has the Father lost His property of being
unbegotten because He hath begotten, nor has the Son lost His
property of being begotten because He was begotten of that which was
unbegotten (for how could that be so?), nor does the Spirit change
either into the Father or into the Son because He hath proceeded and
is God. For a property is quite constant. For how could a property
persist if it were variable, moveable, and could change into something
else? For if the Father is the Son, He is not strictly the
Father: for there is strictly one Father. And if the Son is the
Father, He is not strictly the Son: for there is strictly one Son
and one Holy Spirit.
Further, it should be understood that we do not speak of the Father
as derived from any one, but we speak of Him as the Father of the
Son. And we do not speak of the Son as Cause or Father, but we
speak of Him both as from the Father, and as the Son of the
Father. And we speak likewise of the Holy Spirit as from the
Father, and call Him the Spirit of the Father. And we do not
speak of the Spirit as from the Son: s but yet we call Him the
Spirit of the Son. For if any one hath not the Spirit of Christ,
he is none of His, saith the divine apostle. And we confess that He
is manifested and imparted to us through the Son. For He breathed
upon His Disciples, says he, and said, Receive ye the Holy
Spirit. It is just the same as in the case of the sun from which come
both the ray and the radiance (for the sun itself is the source of both
the ray and the radiance), and it is through the ray that the radiance
is imparted to us, and it is the radiance itself by which we are
lightened and in which we participate. Further we do not speak of the
Son of the Spirit, or of the Son as derived from the Spirit.
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